Arriving approximately fifteen years too late, Apartment
1303 is a terrifying shocker based on the highly acclaimed (that’s what it says
here) J-horror film of the same name. I say terrifying but what I really mean
is terrifyingly bad. I say shocker but what I really mean is shocking. Starring
Mischa Barton (The OC, The Sixth Sense), Rebecca De Mornay (The Hand that Rocks
the Cradle) and Julianne Michelle (Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps), Apartment
1303 is released through Koch Media this June, available to buy on DVD, Blu-ray
and VOD.
I was starting to think the curse of the J-horror remake had
passed, but this 2012 offering is further proof that you can’t keep a dead girl
down. Hollywood will continue to raid the vaults of Asian cinema over the next
few years, with remakes of Oldboy and Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance looking most
likely to offend, but I was really hoping it had learnt its lesson from the
likes of One Missed Call, Shutter and The Eye. Clearly there is still a thirst
for tired remakes in Hollywood.
Having grown up under the grip of her fame-hungry mother,
Janet Slate takes the opportunity to go it alone, moving into a high-rise
apartment in downtown Detroit. Played by Julianne Michelle, Janet is one of the
dumbest movie heroines you are ever likely to see. She makes the girl from
Scary Movie look like Laurie Strode. Janet is the kind of girl who chooses to
investigate the sudden appearance of a shadowy figure in her apartment, rather
than get the hell out of Dodge.
Julianne Michelle is one of the films many clouds but she
does look good in her underwear so maybe we’ll stick with the silver linings
here. She doesn’t even get naked for the one and only sex scene, so she deserves
everything she gets quite frankly. I mean really, what kind of American horror
movie is this? As Janet’s alcoholic mother, Rebecca De Mornay hams it up like
an evil Disney villain. She even gets to sing a bit.
Mischa Baron doesn’t fare much better. After learning the
awful truth about the former residents of apartment 1303 she decides to spend
the night anyway, and Mischa delivers her lines with as much conviction as a
Stephen Hawking’s speech synthesizer. I get the feeling she thought she was
playing the part of the apartment at times, because she’s pretty much vacant
the whole way through.
Despite strange neighbours and a pantomime landlord, Janet
unpacks her things and celebrates her freedom. Talking out loud in case we
can’t work out what she’s contemplating. Things like, “How do I walk and talk
at the same time?” and “There’s that dead girl again, maybe she’d like a glass
of wine.” Quickly followed by, “If only I could work out how to use this bottle
opener.” Things like that. Janet stays in the apartment, in spite of a series
of inexplicable encounters with ghostly figures, and meets a grisly end some
thirteen floors below her new pad.
Boyfriend Mark finds her in the middle of the street, and in
keeping with the ludicrous tone of the movie, is probably the most
unsympathetic person you are ever likely to witness. The kind of boyfriend who,
after hearing that the apartment smells of rotting flesh and the seedy landlord
forced his way in to make an ‘arrangement over repayments’, asks his girlfriend
whether or not she’s stoned. Before reminding her that he’s really busy and
doesn’t have time to comfort her. Quite the charmer I’m sure you’ll agree.
Maybe she should’ve taken her clothes off sooner.
Refusing to accept the investigators conclusion of suicide,
and aided by the knowledge of previous incidents, Lara is determined to reveal
the truth behind her sister’s death. But not before a glorious exchange with
her sozzled mother, in which she asks the question, “Want to get out of here
and watch a movie?” To which her mum replies, “We just buried your sister”.
It’s a wonderful moment, truly inspired and completely unintentional. If only
the rest of the film had dared to be so comedic.
Just occasionally Apartment 1303 wins you over with sheer
stupidity. Like when Lara asks Janet’s boyfriend if he told the police about
the person she was wrestling with on the balcony before she died. To which he
replies, “I did, but they told me not to tell anyone.” She doesn’t even
question it; presumably she was hoping he’d take her to the movies instead. If
you think I’m giving too much away, don’t worry, all that I’ve described takes
place in the opening act. I’m kind of hoping you’ve read enough by now.
With tired direction, dumb characters and an alarming lack
of scares, Apartment 1303 is one of the daftest horror movies of the year. The
acting is horrific, the writing is predictable and there’s very little to
recommend. Remakes like this really do make you question the filmmakers’
sanity. Maybe Janet’s boyfriend was onto something after all, because you’d
have to be stoned to get through trash like this.
Terrifying. Shocking. Tragic. You have been warned.
They’ll probably steal that for the blurb on the poster. AW
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